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#1910s

9 incidents tagged

Mild

Calcutta Cricket Club and the Eastern India Game in the 1910s

India

1915-01-01

While Bombay's Quadrangular dominated Indian cricket headlines in the 1910s, Calcutta Cricket Club — founded in 1792 and one of the oldest in the world — continued as the centre of cricket in eastern India, hosting touring sides through the war and providing a meeting point for the British and increasingly Indian elites of Bengal.

#calcutta#ccc#india
Mild

Frank Woolley's Decade — The Pride of Kent Comes Into His Own, 1910-1914

England

1914-07-01

Frank Woolley emerged in the years 1910-1914 as the most beautiful left-handed batsman in cricket — Kent's all-round star, England's middle-order hope and, after the war, one of only nine men to score over 50,000 first-class runs.

#frank-woolley#kent#england
Mild

Patsy Hendren Becomes Middlesex's Star — Pre-War Emergence

Middlesex

1914-08-01

Patsy Hendren made his Middlesex debut in 1907 and through the 1910s grew into one of the most popular cricketers ever to play at Lord's — short, jovial, brilliantly quick in the deep, and a batsman who would eventually score 170 first-class centuries.

#patsy-hendren#middlesex#england
Mild

Charlie Macartney's Pre-War Peak — Australia's Governor-General Bats, 1910-1914

Australia

1914-02-15

Charlie Macartney established himself in the 1910-1914 period as Australia's most dashing pre-war stroke-maker after Trumper — a small, neat batsman with a back-foot drive so destructive that English crowds would later nickname him 'the Governor-General' for the way he carried himself at the crease.

#charlie-macartney#australia#1910s
Mild

White Heather Club and Women's Cricket Through the 1910s

England women's clubs

1914-07-01

The White Heather Club, founded in 1887 in Yorkshire, continued through the 1910s as the most prominent organised women's cricket club in England, playing exhibition matches and serving as the bridge between Victorian and modern women's cricket.

#white-heather-club#women#england
Mild

Frank Field — Warwickshire's Quiet 1910s Workhorse

Warwickshire

1914-05-15

Frank Field, the Warwickshire fast bowler who partnered Frank Foster in the championship-winning side of 1911 and continued to lead the county attack until the war, was one of the underrated workhorses of the early 1910s — taking over 100 wickets in three consecutive seasons.

#frank-field#warwickshire#1910s
🔥Moderate

The Decline of South Africa's Googly Quartet — 1910-1914

South Africa

1914-03-01

South Africa's celebrated googly attack of Reggie Schwarz, Bert Vogler, Aubrey Faulkner and Gordon White peaked in the 1905-06 home series and on the 1907 tour of England. By 1910-14 — the period covered by the Triangular Tournament and the 1913-14 Barnes series — the foursome had broken up and South Africa had no comparable bowling resource.

#south-africa#googly#schwarz
🔥Mild

Hesketh-Prichard, the Fast-Bowling Evangelist — His 1910s Campaign

England

1913-04-01

Hesketh Hesketh-Prichard, the amateur fast bowler, big-game hunter and Country Life writer, spent the 1910s in a near-evangelical public campaign to revive English fast bowling — arguing that the game was being dominated by spin and slow bowlers and that England would lose Tests until it produced new pacemen.

#hesketh-prichard#fast-bowling#england
Mild

The Imperial Cricket Conference Becomes Active — 1909 into the 1910s

England, Australia, South Africa

1910-06-15

The Imperial Cricket Conference, founded at Lord's in June 1909 with England, Australia and South Africa as founding members, became operationally active through 1910-1914 — the body that scheduled the 1912 Triangular and would in time become the modern ICC.

#icc#imperial-cricket-conference#1909